to take a
pisolino
âthatâs a little napâso that sheâd be up for going to the
sagra
that night.
Bruce and JoJo picked us up around seven oâclock and we drove about forty-five minutes to a little town called Canarra, which is in the farm country just south of Assisi. Canarra also happens to be where St. Francis did his famous talk with the birds. Along the way, Bruce filled us in on what we were about to experience.
âThere are
sagras
all over Italy. For most towns, the
sagra
is the sole source of revenue for the entire year. Itâll help to pay for equipping the fire department or erecting a war memorial in the piazza . . . whatever. And the whole town pitches in.â
âThe best is the goose
sagra
in Bettona,â chipped in JoJo. âGoose done every way you can imagineâand some ways you canât.â
âWhat about the snail
sagra
in the Valnerina?â
âGarden pests. I canât stomach them. I donât know what you see in them, to tell you the truth.â
âEven a snail needs love, Joanna.â
âYou donât love them; you eat them.â
Bruce smiled his little Cheshire cat grin. Heâs been playing straight man to JoJo for years, and they have their act down pat.
âWhat about the one at Lago di Bolsena?â said JoJo. âThatâs probably the best, if you had to choose.â
âThey hold it every year on Ash Wednesday. Most
sagras
are in the summerâwhen the crops are coming inâbut Lago Bolsenaâs is in the middle of the winter.â
âAsh Wednesdayârain or shine.â
âThey cook everything in these giant cauldronsâfish from the lakeâand the cooks wear asbestos suits to avoid getting incinerated.â
âAnd you have to bring your own plate, your own silverware, everything.â
âYeah. All they provide is the fish.â
âItâs a madhouse. You have to reserve months in advance.â
We couldnât get any closer to Cannara than a half-mile away. We parked alongside the road and hiked in with hundreds of other people. Cannaraâs is an onion
sagra
. Their onions are famously sweetâmuch like Mauis or Vidaliasâand when the crop comes in, you can find them featured all over Italy.
The tiny town was packed with people. All the stores were open and set up like booths at a carnival. And in the four main piazzas, giant tents had been constructed to serve as restaurants. There were long lines at every one, but the turnover was pretty fast. The cooks were recruited from the men and women of the townâCannarians, I supposeâwho had been cooking these recipes for generations. Once we got inside, we found seats at one of the long tablesâeverything was family styleâand in no time, a young woman came up to take our order. She was clearly not a professional. She shouted at us over the din to hurry up and order; we shouted back what we wanted. We ordered onion soupâserved with onion bread; then pastawith bacon and onions, which was a knockout; then various meat dishesâsmothered with onions, of course; then a big plate of fried onions for the middle of the table. There was an onion and fennel saladâto cleanse the palateâand we finished up with onion ice cream, which was as bad as it sounds. We washed all this down with pitchers of young red wine.
After we paid upâmaking our contribution to the local economyâwe walked through the little streets, burping merrily along with the rest of the crowd. There were stands selling all sorts of productsâonion compotes, strings of fresh onions, onion artifacts of all kinds. And there was one piazza set up for dancing, with a live band and colored lights strung from building to building. Everyone danced exactly the sameâa kind of fox trot, I think. It was as if they had all studied at the same Arthur Murrayâs.
Caroline bought a chance at a stand called the
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